Sometimes the simplest questions can lead you into very complex territory. We often start our projects by asking a client for their list of products. Sounds simple enough, but getting a tight definition on what is a product seems to be getting more and more difficult, especially when services are involved. Consulting the dictionary isn't much help. Most definitions of "product" have mathematical roots - a product is the result of multiplying 2 or more numbers, or a thing that is made from a combination of other things. A business oriented definition is "something that is marketed or sold as a commodity" (the "as a commodity" part being an important condition indicating that the "something" is sold in the same form more than once).
Why do we ask this question? As products get more and more abstract, simple management questions such as creating a list of products become agonizing efforts. This ambiguity is often a root cause of many product management challenges. How can there be a coherent product plan or road map when there is no agreement on what is and isn't part of the product? How can product managers know what they are responsible for if there is no schematic of where a product starts and stops? For our purposes we define a product as "the thing that a customer buys." Therefore, the "bill of materials" for a product includes all of the labor, processes and raw goods needed to deliver that which a customer is willing to pay for. A single missing ingredient, like a shipping container, can make the entire product useless (if it can't be delivered for example).
Lately, we've been spending a lot of time in the financial services sector, an industry where products are often services based on abstract concepts. It's also a place where the discipline of product management is still evolving - especially when compared with industries with more tangible products. Consider a product that seems simple - a checking account. Is that a product? It certainly has value and is something that customers use. Like most products, there are many features and functions to consider (interest rates, balance minimums, online checking, auto bill pay, overdraft protection, custom checks, etc). Do you think there should be a product manager for "checking accounts?" How would you measure the revenue for that product? What are the costs and margins for that product? Some banks consider their online banking website to be a product since that's what the customer sees. Should there be a separate product manager for that website? What about a product manager for the ATM network? If so, is the website a part of the product called "checking account?" Or is checking a part of the website offering? In fact, there are no obvious answers. But there is a compelling need for clarity and consistency in how "products" are defined.
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